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www.berghahnjournals.com/environment-and-society 1 Environment and Society: Advances in Research SUBMISSION INFORMATION FOR CONTRIBUTORS Please send submissions of articles, reviews, and other contributions as Microsoft Word or Rich Text Format (RTF) files by email to the editors at [email protected]. Articles should be 8,000 to 10,000 words (including notes and references), although longer articles may be considered. Please consult with the editors concerning appropriate lengths for reviews and review articles. FORMATTING The document must be set at the US letter standard size. The entire document (including notes and references) should be double-spaced with 1-inch (2.5 cm) margins on all sides and no extra spaces between paragraphs. A 12- point standard font such as Times New Roman is required for all text, including headings, notes, and references. Any unusual characters or diacritics should be flagged by placing the entire word in red type. COVER PAGE The cover page should provide the title of the article, complete contact information for each author (mailing address, phone number, and email), biographical data of approximately 100 words for each author (including an ORCID if applicable), a total word count, the number of tables and/or figures included, and any acknowledgments. Affiliations and email addresses will be posted online for indexing/abstracting purposes. ABSTRACT/KEYWORDS The article must include an abstract of 125 words and 5 to 8 keywords. The abstract should not duplicate the text verbatim but rather include the research question or puzzle, identify the data, and give some indication of the findings. Keywords should be drawn from the content and not duplicate the article title, listed in alphabetical order, and separated by commas; only proper nouns should be capitalized. COPYRIGHT/PERMISSIONS Upon acceptance, authors are required to submit copyright agreements and all necessary permission letters for reprinting or modifying copyrighted materials, both textual and graphic. The author is fully responsible for obtaining all permissions and clearing any associated fees to reproduce copyrighted materials. ARTWORK For optimal reproduction, figures or photos should be submitted as high-resolution JPGs or TIFFs (300 ppi), or as EPS files with all fonts embedded. All images should be at least 4 x 4 inches at the resolution indicated. Tables should be made and submitted in Microsoft Word or rtf. All figures and tables should be in separate files and numbered consecutively; only placement indicators and captions (with source/copyright information) should be included in the articles themselves. For more details, please see our Artwork submission webpage. PROCESS FOR REFEREEING AND ACCEPTING ARTICLES Environment and Society is a refereed journal. Submissions are considered on the understanding that the article is not currently under consideration for publication elsewhere. Articles are sent to at least two scholars with relevant experience and expertise. Referees are asked to advise the editors as to whether an article should be published and, if so, with what recommended changes. The editors respond to the author with a decision, a list of any changes needed for the article to be accepted for publication, and the anonymous referees' comments or a summary thereof. PUBLICATION Manuscripts accepted for publication that do not conform to the style guide may be rejected or returned to the author for amendment. The editors also reserve the right to alter usage to conform to the style guide issued by the publisher. Authors cannot supply new materials or request major alterations following the copyediting stage, so please ensure that all text is final upon acceptance. Contributors of research articles will receive one free copy of the relevant issue and may purchase additional copies at a reduced price or purchase offprints.

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www.berghahnjournals.com/environment-and-society 1

Environment and Society: Advances in Research SUBMISSION INFORMATION FOR CONTRIBUTORS Please send submissions of articles, reviews, and other contributions as Microsoft Word or Rich Text Format (RTF) files by email to the editors at [email protected]. Articles should be 8,000 to 10,000 words (including notes and references), although longer articles may be considered. Please consult with the editors concerning appropriate lengths for reviews and review articles.

FORMATTING The document must be set at the US letter standard size. The entire document (including notes and references) should be double-spaced with 1-inch (2.5 cm) margins on all sides and no extra spaces between paragraphs. A 12-point standard font such as Times New Roman is required for all text, including headings, notes, and references. Any unusual characters or diacritics should be flagged by placing the entire word in red type.

COVER PAGE The cover page should provide the title of the article, complete contact information for each author (mailing address, phone number, and email), biographical data of approximately 100 words for each author (including an ORCID if applicable), a total word count, the number of tables and/or figures included, and any acknowledgments. Affiliations and email addresses will be posted online for indexing/abstracting purposes.

ABSTRACT/KEYWORDS The article must include an abstract of 125 words and 5 to 8 keywords. The abstract should not duplicate the text verbatim but rather include the research question or puzzle, identify the data, and give some indication of the findings. Keywords should be drawn from the content and not duplicate the article title, listed in alphabetical order, and separated by commas; only proper nouns should be capitalized.

COPYRIGHT/PERMISSIONS Upon acceptance, authors are required to submit copyright agreements and all necessary permission letters for reprinting or modifying copyrighted materials, both textual and graphic. The author is fully responsible for obtaining all permissions and clearing any associated fees to reproduce copyrighted materials.

ARTWORK For optimal reproduction, figures or photos should be submitted as high-resolution JPGs or TIFFs (300 ppi), or as EPS files with all fonts embedded. All images should be at least 4 x 4 inches at the resolution indicated. Tables should be made and submitted in Microsoft Word or rtf. All figures and tables should be in separate files and numbered consecutively; only placement indicators and captions (with source/copyright information) should be included in the articles themselves. For more details, please see our Artwork submission webpage.

PROCESS FOR REFEREEING AND ACCEPTING ARTICLES Environment and Society is a refereed journal. Submissions are considered on the understanding that the article is not currently under consideration for publication elsewhere. Articles are sent to at least two scholars with relevant experience and expertise. Referees are asked to advise the editors as to whether an article should be published and, if so, with what recommended changes. The editors respond to the author with a decision, a list of any changes needed for the article to be accepted for publication, and the anonymous referees' comments or a summary thereof.

PUBLICATION Manuscripts accepted for publication that do not conform to the style guide may be rejected or returned to the author for amendment. The editors also reserve the right to alter usage to conform to the style guide issued by the publisher. Authors cannot supply new materials or request major alterations following the copyediting stage, so please ensure that all text is final upon acceptance. Contributors of research articles will receive one free copy of the relevant issue and may purchase additional copies at a reduced price or purchase offprints.

www.berghahnjournals.com/environment-and-society 2

Have other questions about submitting your manuscript? Please refer to Berghahn’s Journal Author FAQs for additional information.

STYLE GUIDE The Advances in Research style guide is based on The Chicago Manual of Style (CMS). Please note that the journal uses US punctuation and spelling, following Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary.

CITATION SYSTEM Environment and Society follows the in-text author-date system, with full documentation in the reference list. Other notes should be endnotes (using Word’s automatic endnote function) and kept short and to a minimum.

Author-Date Examples (Pickett and White 1985; Smith 1987) Jones’s research (1977, 1979a, 1979b) (Kant n.d.; McGinnis forthcoming) Single Author with Multiple Sources: (Smith 1993: 63; 1998: 124–169; 2001: 104) Three or More Authors: (Jones et al. 2001) Authors with Same Last Name: (D. Smith 1981; G. Smith 1999)

The first mention of an author in the main body text (not in-text citations) should include the first and last name. Multiple sources in a parenthetical note should be listed alphabetically. Please note that translations of all non-English titles in the reference list are required for indexing/abstracting purposes (see the translated title examples provided below).

REFERENCE EXAMPLES Book with one author/editor

Wagner, Roy G. (1975) 1981. The Invention of Culture. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Book with multiple authors/editors

Lü, Xiaobo, and Elizabeth J. Perry, eds. 1997. Danwei: The Changing Chinese Workplace in Historical and Comparative Perspective. New York: M. E. Sharpe.

Chapter or other part of a book

Franklin, Sarah. 1995. “Romancing the Helix.” In Romance Revisited, ed. Lynne Pearce and Jackie Stacy, 63–77. New York: New York University Press.

Translations

Schmitt, Carl. 1985. The Crisis of Parliamentary Democracy. Trans. Ellen Kennedy. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.

Translated titles

Bernet, Moshe. 2009. A Nation Like Any Nation: Toward the Establishment of an Israeli Republic. [In Hebrew.] Jerusalem: Carmel.

Wikan, Unni. 1995. Mot en ny norsk underklasse [Toward a new Norwegian underclass] Oslo: Gyldendal.

Journal article (always include the doi) Martin, Robert W. T. 1997. “Context and Contradiction: Toward a Political Theory of Conceptual Change.” Political

Research Quarterly 50 (2): 413–436. https://doi.org/10.1177/10659129970500208.

www.berghahnjournals.com/environment-and-society 3

Article in a newspaper or magazine Barghouthi, Mustafa. 2012. “Peaceful Protest Can Free Palestine.” New York Times, 21 February.

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/22/opinion/peaceful-protest-can-freepalestine.html. Paper presented at a meeting or conference

Szebehely, Marta. 2007. “Carework in Scandinavia: Organisational Trends and Everyday Realities.” Paper presented at the 5th Annual ESPAnet Conference, Vienna, 20–22 September.

Report

Christoplos, Ian, Simon Anderson, Margaret Arnold, Victor Galaz, Merylyn Hedger, Richard J. T. Klein, and Katell Le Goulven. 2009. The Human Dimension of Climate Adaptation: The Importance of Local and Institutional Issues. Report to the Commission on Climate Change and Development, Ministry for Foreign Affairs, Stockholm.

Thesis, dissertation, or unpublished manuscript

Villarreal, Magdalena. 1994. “Wielding and Yielding: Power, Subordination and Gender Identity in the Context of a Mexican Development Project.” PhD diss., Wageningen University.

Archive materials Individual items in archives are usually best cited in endnotes and may be cited according to the conventions of the particular archive or kind of material being cited. A collection as a whole may be cited in the reference list.

Dedyk, Claudia. 1933. Linguistics Memos, Rossiskii Gosudarsvenyi Isoricheskii Arkhiv [RGIA], fond 1129, opis 1,

delo 491, 11 February, 74–83, 116–119. Russian State Historical Archives, St. Petersburg. Egmont Manuscripts. n.d. Phillips Collection. University of Georgia Library, Athens.

Websites and blogs Access dates are only required when no date of publication or revision can be determined from the source.

Marshall, Ruth. 2011. “Falling on the Sword of the Spirit.” Immanent Frame, 28 February.

http://blogs.ssrc.org/tif/2011/02/28/falling-on-the-sword-of-the-spirit. WHO (World Health Organisation). 2000. “Committee on Technical Barriers to Trade—Notification—Mexico—

Tequila.” http://docsonline.eto.org/TBT/Notif.00/168 (accessed 9 April 2000). Online video

Rubinstein, Arthur. 2011. “Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto No. 2, Op. 18, I Moderato.” Video, 10:16. Uploaded 8 November. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Vv0Sy9FJrc&list=PLDB11C4F39E09047F.

www.berghahnjournals.com/environment-and-society 4

ARTICLE SUBMISSION CHECKLIST

Copyright assignment form is signed and submitted (no later than the final revised article submission);

Cover sheet is included and provides:

o Title of the article;

o An abstract of 125 words that is a summary or overview of the entire article and does not duplicate verbatim sections of the main text;

o Five to eight keywords that are in alphabetical order and separated by commas (with only proper nouns capitalized);

o Complete contact information for each author (mailing address, phone number, and email);

o A bio of approximately 100 words for each author (including an ORCID if applicable);

o Total word count, the number of tables and/or figures included, and any acknowledgments.

For any figures, ensure that:

o Placement indicators and captions (with source/copyright information) have been provided in the main text for all figures and tables;

o Separate files are provided (clearly named and consecutively numbered) and in the required format with all accompanying permissions.

PLEASE ENSURE THAT:

• The style guide has been followed;

• All text, including headings, notes, and references, is in a standard 12-point type, such as Times New Roman, and double-spaced with a 1-inch margin on all sides and no extra spaces between paragraphs;

• US spelling is used throughout, and a spellcheck has been performed;

• Different levels of headings are indicated by varying the typeface. Use bold type for an A head (a main text heading). Use bold italic for a B head (a first-level subheading). Use non-bold italic for a C head;

• Superscript note reference numbers and/or asterisks are not placed on article titles, headings, epigraphs, or the contributor’s name;

• Contributions are referred to as articles (not essays or papers);

• Numbers less than 10 are spelled out (as are large whole numbers, e.g., nine hundred), and all number ranges are non-abbreviated;

• Foreign-language words that are not common in US usage are italicized on every instance;

• Double quotation marks are used for all quotations and terms, except for quotes or terms within quotes, and quotations of more than 100 words are indented as extracts with no quotation marks;

• URLs are not located in the main text when used in a bibliographical sense (although names such as Amazon.com are acceptable). Any URLs have been relocated to endnotes or the reference list;

• Abbreviations such as e.g., i.e., etc., and et al. are not used in the main text (except in parentheses);

• Every author mentioned in the reference list is cited in the main text or notes, and every author cited in the main text and notes is listed in the reference list.